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Products are filtered by different dates, depending on the combination of live and on-demand components that they contain, and on whether any live components are over or not.
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  • Contains 1 Component(s) Includes a Live Web Event on 11/13/2024 at 1:00 PM (EST)

    Webinar date/time will be announced soon...

    Coming soon... 

  • Contains 2 Component(s) Includes a Live Web Event on 10/06/2024 at 1:00 PM (EDT)

    This workshop helps candidates understand and prepare for the Grading, Drainage, and Stormwater Management exam. NOTICE: If your intention is to attend the workshop in-person, please register for the workshop at www.aslaconference.com

    Elevate your preparation for the Grading, Drainage, and Stormwater Management section of the L.A.R.E. Review critical sub-domains and acquire the necessary knowledge and skills for success.

    NOTICE: If your intention is to attend this workshop in Washington DC, please register for the workshop at www.aslaconference.com

    Donnie Longenecker

    University of Georgia College of Environment and Design

    Donnie Longenecker is an entrepreneur and educator. His firm, DTC, provides a planning, program and project management services for a wide variety of clients and projects. Donnie also serves as a Lecturer and Continuing Education Coordinator for the University of Georgia College of Environment and Design.

    Kristian Kelley

    Arizona State University

  • Contains 2 Component(s) Includes a Live Web Event on 10/06/2024 at 9:00 AM (EDT)

    This workshop helps candidates understand and prepare for the Construction Documentation & Administration exam. NOTICE: If your intention is to attend the workshop in-person, please register for the workshop at www.aslaconference.com

    Elevate your preparation for the Construction Documentation & Administration section of the L.A.R.E. Review critical sub-domains and acquire the necessary knowledge and skills for success.

    NOTICE: If your intention is to attend this workshop in Washington DC, please register for the workshop at www.aslaconference.com

    Jeff Holzer, PLA

    Landscape Architect

    Kimley-Horn

    Jeff Holzer is a licensed Landscape Architect in the Commonwealth of Virginia and is a Certified Playground Safety Inspector for Kimley-Horn and Associates. Jeff has 7 years of experience with a practice in active and passive parks, playgrounds, streetscapes, school/universities, and athletic fields. As Kimley-Horn's only CPSI, Jeff has advised on over 70 playgrounds across 19 states. Jeff volunteers on the LARE Prep committee for ASLA, and the REC TALK committee for the National Recreation and Park Association. In 2020, Jeff won the ANOVA sponsored napkin sketch design competition with a sketch and essay entitled Inclusive Playgrounds for All.

    Thomas Nieman, PhD, FASLA

    Professor of Landscape Architecture, Emeritus

    University of Kentucky

    Thomas J. Nieman, PhD, PLA, FASLA, is Professor Emeritus of Landscape Architecture at the University of Kentucky where he taught for 39 years. He is a practicing landscape architect specializing in the design and layout of thoroughbred horse farms. He has taught and continues to present Landscape Architecture licensure review sessions at the ASLA Annual Meetings, LABash, and numerous state chapters. Licensure of all landscape architecture graduates is his mission for the profession.

  • Contains 2 Component(s) Includes a Live Web Event on 10/05/2024 at 12:30 PM (EDT)

    This workshop helps candidates understand and prepare for the Planning & Design exam. NOTICE: If your intention is to attend the workshop in-person, please register for the workshop at www.aslaconference.com

    Elevate your preparation for the Planning & Design section of the L.A.R.E. Review critical sub-domains and acquire the necessary knowledge and skills for success.

    NOTICE: If your intention is to attend this workshop in Washington DC, please register for the workshop at www.aslaconference.com

    Madeline Steigerwald, ASLA, PLA

    Landscape Architect, Jr. Project Manager

    Dix Hite + Partners

    Madeline is a former Akronite living in Orlando, Florida. She earned a Bachelor of Science in Landscape Architecture degree with a French minor from The Ohio State University in 2010. After the recession, she found her way back to landscape architecture with a position at Nimrod Long & Associates in Birmingham, Alabama. She gained experience in both public and private work then obtained licensure in June 2017. Later that year, Madeline joined Dix.Hite + Partners where her current project focus includes campus, roadway and streetscape design, multi-family developments, residential design, community hardscape and landscape renovations, and exterior building color studies.

    Dana Hernalsteen, PLA

    Landscape Architect

    GMB Architects

  • Contains 2 Component(s) Includes a Live Web Event on 10/05/2024 at 8:30 AM (EDT)

    This workshop helps candidates understand and prepare for the Inventory, Analysis, and Project Management exam. NOTICE: If your intention is to attend the workshop in-person, please register for the workshop at www.aslaconference.com

    Elevate your preparation for the Inventory, Analysis, and Project Management section of the L.A.R.E. Review critical sub-domains and acquire the necessary knowledge and skills for success.

    NOTICE: If your intention is to attend this workshop in Washington DC, please register for the workshop at www.aslaconference.com

    Elizabeth Van Sickel, PLA

    Kimley-Horn

    Darneka Waters

    Planner

    Mecklenburg County Park and Recreation

    Darneka Waters is a Park Planner for Mecklenburg County Park and Recreation, responsible for capital planning and development coordination, public engagement, and master plan implementation for parks, greenways, nature preserves, and more. As an emerging professional and alumna of NC State University, she is known for her participation in industry and community-based organizations. Currently, she is a Black Landscape Architects Network (BlackLAN) Board member and regularly volunteers within the American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA). Before joining Mecklenburg County, Waters worked on numerous urban design and planning projects as a Landscape Designer at an interdisciplinary firm in Charlotte, NC.

  • Contains 9 Product(s)

    From February to October, the featured Free PDH of the Month will be the webinars offered as part of the Biodiversity Climate Action Webinar Series.

    A free webinar series for ASLA Members hosted by the ASLA Biodiversity and Climate Action Committee. 

    (Note: the date and time for the final webinar is TBD and will be announced once confirmed.)

    For more than a year, the ASLA Biodiversity and Climate Action Committee has been leading the implementation of the ASLA Climate Action Plan. Join climate action leaders for a 9-part webinar series to share collaborative research and knowledge to advance the goals of decarbonization and biodiversity protection.

    This series is designed to expand knowledge within the profession to achieve the Climate Action Plan Vision for 2040 – All landscape architecture projects will simultaneously: 

    • Achieve zero embodied and operational emissions and increase carbon sequestration 
    • Provide significant economic benefits in the form of measurable ecosystem services, health co-benefits, sequestration, and green jobs 
    • Address climate injustices, empower communities, and increase equitable distribution of climate investments 
    • Restore ecosystems and protect, conserve, and enhance biodiversity. 

    This webinar series is underwritten by
    image

  • Contains 1 Component(s) Includes a Live Web Event on 09/26/2024 at 2:00 PM (EDT)

    This webinar will briefly review the fundamentals of the biodiversity crisis. Through case studies, we will then explore ways landscape architects can apply conservation science and design practices to protect and enhance biodiversity.

    Biodiversity is a simple word for the unimaginably complex sum of all life on Earth. Our societies are responsible for the accelerated loss of biodiversity, primarily through habitat destruction and fragmentation. Landscape architects are uniquely qualified to take a leadership role in protecting the diversity of life on this planet. More so than all the other design professions. 

    This webinar will briefly review the fundamentals of the biodiversity crisis. Through case studies, we will then explore ways landscape architects can apply conservation science and design practices to protect and enhance biodiversity. 

    Learning objectives:

    1. Understand the fundamental reasons for the decline of biodiversity and how landscape architects can play a role in stemming the loss.
    2. Become familiar with the links between the loss of biodiversity, climate change, and environmental justice. 
    3. Learn approaches, strategies and practices - at different scales - to protect, enhance, and off-set impacts to biodiversity. 
    4. Explore ideas for deeper dives into biodiversity design practices.

    Image above: Fern Hill Treatment Wetlands. Forest Grove, Oregon. Biohabitats / Jim Maloney

    Keith Bowers, FASLA

    Founder/Team Leader

    Biohabitats, Inc.

    As the founder and president of Biohabitats, Keith has pioneered the practice of nature-based design, green infrastructure, and regenerative design within the landscape architecture community. As a multidisciplinary organization with a mission to Restore the Earth and Inspire Ecological Stewardship, Biohabitats practices at the crossroads between biodiversity conservation, climate adaptation and environmental justice. Keith’s mission is to change the way capitalism is practiced. As a B-Corp and 1% for the Planet organization, Keith has instilled Self Governance, Wholeness, and Evolutionary Purpose as the guiding principles behind Biohabitats success. Keith is an advocate for biodiversity and ecological restoration around the world.

    Sohyun Park, ASLA, PhD, SITES AP

    Associate Professor of Landscape Architecture

    University of Connecticut

    Dr. Sohyun Park, ASLA, PhD, is Assistant Professor in the Department of Plant Science and Landscape Architecture at the University of Connecticut. She earned her Ph.D. degree in Environmental Design and Planning from Arizona State University, a Master’s Degree in Landscape Architecture from Seoul National University, and a Bachelor’s of Science in Biology from Sookmyung Women's University. She is a SITES Accredited Professional.

    David Cutter, FASLA, SITES AP (Moderator)

    Landscape Architect

    Cornell University

    David Cutter, FASLA is the University Landscape Architect for Cornell University, renowned for its spectacular landscape, diverse architecture and sustainability ethos. He is licensed in New York, and a SITES AP with 30 years’ experience in planning, design, and management. Prior to joining Cornell, he worked as a consulting landscape architect and an environmental scientist with the Environmental Protection Agency in Philadelphia, and as a county planner, national scenic byway landscape architect, and community planner for the Army in upstate New York. While his primary duties revolve around campus planning, design and stewardship, working for a leading university has rekindled his interest in education and the nexus between academic and professional practice. He embraces the premise of the campus landscape as a living classroom and is always open to opportunities to collaborate with instructors, students and researchers to incorporate real sites, issues and research into the student experience. David has also been an active advocate for the profession, serving as a leader, mentor, and volunteer in the American Society of Landscape Architects at the state and national level, and a founding member of the Association of University Landscape Architects.

  • Contains 1 Component(s) Includes a Live Web Event on 09/24/2024 at 6:00 PM (EDT)

    Discover how landscape architects are helping to protect Lower Manhattan from climate impacts through design. Learn about some of the most cutting-edge coastal risk reduction projects.

    Co-hosted by the American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA) and ASLA's New York Chapter as part of Climate Week NYC

    Discover how landscape architects are helping to protect Lower Manhattan from climate impacts through design. Learn about some of the most cutting-edge coastal risk reduction projects. 

    After Superstorm Sandy, Manhattan below 14th street was without power for weeks. Storm surge flooded buildings and caused widespread infrastructure failures. Since then, plans to create a more resilient Lower Manhattan have been shaped through efforts like NYC’s Special Initiative for Rebuilding and Resiliency and the Rebuild by Design competition. Landscape architects were heavily involved in both projects. These plans have come together in The East Side Coastal Resiliency Project (ESCR) and The Lower Manhattan Coastal Resiliency (LMCR) Project. 

    These are coastal protection initiatives aimed at reducing flood risk from coastal storms and sea level rise. They seek to increase resilience while preserving access to the waterfront and integrating public space. As part of this new infrastructure, landscape architects are playing a critical role in combining flood defense with exciting new open space. We are integrating new infrastructure into the city’s fabric and harnessing nature.  

    The East Side Coastal Resiliency Project – along with other resilience efforts in Battery Park City, South Street Seaport, and the Financial District – are now well underway.

    Learning Objectives: 

    1. Understand how nature-based solutions, like wetlands and vegetative buffers, protect coastal areas and mitigate climate risks. 
    2. Examine how differences in funding, FEMA certification, project timing, and governance / maintenance impact the design and implementation of coastal resilience projects.
    3. Analyze how evolving climate projections and research influence long-term coastal resilience projects, focusing on how landscape architects incorporate flood and resilience data into designs at different stages – from planning to construction.
    4. Gain insights into ecological design techniques, such as tidal gardens and dune systems, that promote both human and environmental health.

    Image: The Lower Manhattan Coastal Resiliency (LMCR) Project, NY, NY / SCAPE

    Gonzalo Cruz

    Vice President and Principal of Design, Landscape and Urban Design

    AECOM

    Gonzalo leads AECOM’s Landscape and Urban Design as a Vice President and Principal of Design in the New York Metro area as well as strategic collaborations across the Americas and abroad. 

    In recent years, his team’s portfolio has put forward innovative work at the intersection of large-scale landscape infrastructure and placemaking, including South Battery Park City Resilience’s Wagner Park and Pier A Plaza, Brooklyn Montgomery Coastal Resilience and Seaport Coastal Resilience Waterfronts in Lower Manhattan and Hoboken’ Harborside Waterfront Resilience Park to name a few. 

    His award-winning practice has received numerous awards from ASLA, AIA, NYC by Design, and the Chicago Atheneum Design Excellence Award in Open Space design for the World Trade Center’s Liberty Park. 

    Gonzalo holds a Bachelor of Architecture from the City College of New York and a Master of Landscape Architecture from Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design.

    Molly Bourne, ASLA

    Principal

    MNLA

    Molly Bourne sees landscape architecture practice as a medium to celebrate and explore the environment and our place within it. She is deeply dedicated to elevated design thinking that advances the public good. Since joining the firm in 1999, Molly has led award-winning, multidisciplinary teams on high-profile projects for waterfront parks, cultural institutions, and urban revitalization. Activating public space dialogue, tackling climate change, reclaiming industrial sites and shorelines, and protecting pollinators are her professional passions. 

    Developing the next generation of practitioners, Molly is a visiting lecturer at the University of Pennsylvania Weitzman School of Design and volunteers with the ACE Mentor Program for New York City high school students. She enjoys engaging with the profession and public alike, speaking widely, leading site tours, and exchanging inventive ideas about how to better urban environments. 

    Molly’s key projects include the East Side Coastal Resiliency Project, Governors Island Park and Public Space, Waterline Square, South Bronx Greenway Master Plan and Implementation, the Theodore Roosevelt Sanctuary and Audubon Center Master Plan and Implementation, and the Renovation of Roberto Clemente State Park. Molly received her BA at the University of Florida.

    Greta Ruedisueli, ASLA

    Associate

    SCAPE

    Greta Ruedisueli is a landscape architect and associate at SCAPE with design experience in landscape architecture, architecture, planning and branding. Passionate about the iterative design process, Greta works predominantly on built-work projects with SCAPE, leading design teams from concept and schematic design through design development and construction documentation with a special focus on telling the story of a place through materiality. 

    Greta is currently working on the Northwest Battery Park Resiliency Project and a design-build University landscape. Her past experiences at SCAPE include the design and implementation of rooftop terraces for the New York Disney Headquarters and the design of the Amazon campus in Washington DC. 

    Greta holds a Master’s in Landscape Architecture from Harvard University and a Bachelor’s in Architecture from the University of Virginia.

    Rachel Claire Wilkins, Affil. ASLA

    Senior Landscape Designer

    BIG/CSM

    Rachel serves CMS as a sub consultant to the Bjarke Ingels Group as a Project Lead for the North Battery Park Resiliency project. 

    She is dedicated to building sustainable and resilient landscapes that preserve community fabric and explore the role nature can play in urban environments. She has nearly a decade of experience designing and executing landscape work in a wide range of large-scale projects, including resiliency, parks, corporate campuses, mixed-use developments, and historic preservation. 

    Rachel graduated from Loyola University in New Orleans, Louisiana with a degree in biology/premedical studies. She holds a master’s degree in architecture from the University of Houston. She transitioned to landscape architecture in 2013, with roles at OJB Landscape Architecture and SWA Group.

  • Contains 1 Component(s) Includes a Live Web Event on 09/18/2024 at 1:00 PM (EDT)

    Today's projects face increasingly complex questions and issues, requiring sophisticated planning, management, and landscape architecture solutions. This complexity demands a GIS-focused, cross-disciplinary approach, integrating elements of design with both human and natural geography.

    Sponsored by Esri

    Today's projects face increasingly complex questions and issues, requiring sophisticated planning, management, and landscape architecture solutions. This complexity demands a GIS-focused, cross-disciplinary approach, integrating elements of design with both human and natural geography.

    Learning objectives: 

    • Explore modern GIS trends for landscape architecture
    • Learn how GIS can support analytical efforts of landscape design and ecology.
    • Explore how weaving together GIS and design tools can support the processes of schematic design and design development.

    Image credit: Perspective view of a waterfront landscape project using GIS / Esri

    Renia Kagkou

    Senior Solution Engineer – Planning, Urban Design, Landscape

    Esri

    Renia Kagkou is a Senior Solution Engineer at Esri’s AEC (Architecture, Engineering, Construction) team, where she develops workflows that integrate geospatial analysis, scenario testing, and impact assessment, for decision-making in designing the built environment. She consults firms on leveraging these workflows for architecture, urban design, and planning projects of various scales. She holds a Master of Architecture in Urban Design (MAUD) and a Master of Design Studies in Urbanism, Landscape, and Ecology (MDes ULE) from Harvard GSD (2018), and a Bachelor of Architecture from Pratt Institute, New York (2014).

    Daniel Martin, ASLA, PLA

    Senior Consultant and Practice Lead

    Esri

    Daniel Martin is a landscape architect, senior consultant, and practice lead for the environment and geodesign department at Esri. Daniel leverages his background in landscape architecture, ecological mitigation and restoration, and wildlife management to help clients utilize technology and design to build resilience and achieve balance between the natural and built environments.

    Clay Starr

    Architecture, Urban / Landscape Design, Planning Lead

    Esri

    As Esri's Architecture, Urban Planning & Design Lead, Clay Starr is responsible for setting the overall strategy on how GIS enables designers and planners to radically improve their response to the challenges they face, deliver data-driven results, and generate new and better outcomes through the geographic approach.

  • Contains 4 Component(s), Includes Credits Recorded On: 08/19/2024

    Hear from experts and project leaders across the country as they share success stories that have shaped policy and advanced nature-based solutions. Learn about transformative projects like the Los Angeles River Master Plan and San Antonio Mission Reach Ecosystem Restoration and Recreation Project – both U.S. Army Corps of Engineers-backed initiatives – and the Butte, Montana Sustainability, Health, and Resilience Plan. Discover how these efforts are influencing policy and fostering collaboration at all scales and creating opportunities for federal funding.

    Hear from experts and project leaders across the country as they share success stories that have shaped policy and advanced nature-based solutions. Learn about transformative projects like the Los Angeles  River Master Plan and San Antonio Mission Reach Ecosystem Restoration and Recreation Project – both U.S. Army Corps of Engineers-backed initiatives – and the Butte, Montana Sustainability, Health, and Resilience Plan. Discover how these efforts are influencing policy and fostering collaboration at all scales  and creating opportunities for federal funding. 

    Learning Objectives

    • Gain insight into the newly announced US Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) directive and its implications for civil works projects.
    • Understand the collaborative efforts between landscape architects, USACE, local public agencies, and community stakeholders in implementing policies on nature-based solutions.
    • Understand how these large scale master plans are creating opportunities to pursue federal funding for nature-based solutions, particularly focusing on stormwater management and water quality, habitat restoration, multimodal transportation networks, and agricultural land management.
    • Explore how initial implementation projects act as a catalyst for new policies on nature-based solutions  at the scale of the city, watershed, and region.

    Image credit: Los Angeles River at Sepulveda Basin / Sepulveda Basin Vision Plan, City of Los Angeles Bureau of Engineering, Alta

    Hayden Akana

    Landscape Designer

    San Antonio River Authority (SARA)

    Hayden Akana is the Landscape Designer for the San Antonio River Authority (SARA), where she has been a part of the Planning Unit within the Engineering Department for two years. Her work is centered on implementing nature-based solutions (NBS) that enhance water quality and urban environments within SARA’s four-county jurisdiction, reflecting her commitment to sustainability and environmental stewardship. Hayden holds a Bachelor of Science in Architecture from the University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA), Hayden’s academic background emphasizes sustainability within the built environment.

    With an emphasis on resiliency and promoting local multi-benefit solutions, Hayden has contributed to significant SARA projects such as the Leon Creek BMP project for the Watershed Master Plan Program, the Nature-Based Solutions program, and the new Water Quality Improvement Strategies in the San Antonio River Basin project. Her efforts aim to foster safe, clean, and enjoyable rivers while addressing environmental and community needs.
    Alongside her professional work, Hayden is dedicated to community engagement and education. She volunteers at local events to inform the public about the San Antonio River Authority's efforts, emphasizing the importance of small-scale actions in contributing to larger environmental goals, as well as empowering and educating individuals to make a positive impact on their surroundings. Through her work, Hayden strives to create meaningful connections between people and nature, underscoring the importance of landscape architecture in building resilient, sustainable communities that are prepared to face the environmental challenges of the future.

    Michelle E. Garza

    Planning Specialist – Planning, Engineering Department

    San Antonio River Authority

    Michelle has 12 years of experience in the environmental science and sustainable energy fields and 13 years in business management. She has a Bachelor of Science degree from the University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA) where she focused on geology and worked for the Texas Sustainable Energy Research Institute. Ms. Garza has been part of the Sustainable Infrastructure/Planning Unit in the San Antonio River Authority’s Engineering Department for nine years, where she works to educate the community on nature-based stormwater solutions to improve water quality and the urban environment. Ms. Garza is the development coordinator for SARA, working with developers in mandatory coordination areas, such as the River Improvement Overlay District and Westside Creeks Water Quality Overlay, on their LID/green stormwater infrastructure to protect our community's investment in the health and recreation of our creeks and rivers. Ms. Garza has project managed, working with the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) on the Upper San Antonio River (SAR) Watershed Protection Plan (WPP) Green Stormwater Infrastructure (GSI) Master Plan 319 Grant and as the representative on contractual matters for the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality on the Upper SAR WPP Implementation - Stormwater Retrofit Best Management Practices (BMPs) 319 Grant. She is actively involved in the community as Co-chair of the US Green Building Council (USGBC)-South Texas Regional Chapter, President of the University of Texas at San Antonio Urban Planning Student Association, a SARA Watershed Wise Warrior, a Texas Master Naturalist, and a Texas Waters Specialist. Ms. Garza works with SA Tomorrow’s Regional Center Plan and Community Plan areas, SA Climate Ready-Climate Action and Adaptation Plan, and the SA 2030 District.   

    Jessica M. Henson, ASLA, RLA, AICP

    Partner

    OLIN

    Jessica is a Partner at OLIN where she leads the Los Angeles Studio and directs planning and design projects that seek to create socially and environmentally resilient infrastructure including the Los Angeles County LA River Master Plan and the Sepulveda Basin Vision Plan. Her other significant projects include the reimagination of the Truman Presidential Library and Museum Grounds, the Colburn School of Dance, Chicago’s Willis Tower Roof Park, the new U.S. Embassies in London and Brasilia, the O’Hare Global Terminal, and the SELA Cultural Center. 

    Jessica’s work explores the relationships between hydrological, cultural, and social contexts. Specifically, she explores how landscape architects can create anticipatory design solutions that create more equitable communities in both urban and rural settings and respond to issues relating to flooding and water resources. In her design, teaching, and research she seeks to broaden the scope of the profession by thinking holistically about the places we live, why we live there, and the environmental, economic, and social effects of our settlement patterns. She leads the OLIN Labs @Scale project and is the author of “Wet + Dry: Rethinking the Mississippi River Cross-Section,” a study on Upper Mississippi communities exploring the relationships between income, topography, and flooding along the river.  

    Jessica is a registered landscape architect and certified planner. She holds a Master of Landscape Architecture from the University of Pennsylvania School of Design where she won the Laurie D. Olin Award and a Bachelor of Architecture with a minor in structural engineering from the Illinois Institute of Technology. Jessica has also taught at the University of Pennsylvania, the University of Tennessee Knoxville, and the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign where she also served as the Undergraduate Programs Chair in the Department of Landscape Architecture. She is currently an Associate Adjunct Professor at the University of Southern California where she teaches the Master of Landscape Architecture Urban Design Studio in the School of Architecture. 

    April Philips, FASLA (Moderator)

    Founder

    April Philips Design Works (APDW)

    April Philips, FASLA, is the national chair of the ASLA Biodiversity & Climate Action Committee (BCAC), a registered landscape architect in California, a thought leader, artist, author and climate advocate. Founder of April Philips Design Works (APDW), an award-winning landscape architecture firm in California, April is now refocusing her energies exploring new horizons in art, ecology, climate action advocacy, lecturing, traveling, and making art that speaks to the experiential beauty and sprit of place. @AprilPhilipsDesign

    Eileen Takata

    Environmental Manager - South Pacific Division

    U.S. Army Corps of Engineers

    Eileen Takata is the Environmental Manager for the South Pacific Division of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, where she leads initiatives in Cultural Resources, Environmental Justice, and Public Involvement, and supports regional programs focused on environmental compliance and drought resilience. She has also worked extensively with the USACE Collaboration and Public Participation Center of Expertise (CPCX) and is a leader in the Landscape Architecture Community of Practice.

    Before joining the South Pacific Division in 2022, Ms. Takata spent over a decade with the Los Angeles District, where she led significant projects such as the Los Angeles River and East San Pedro Bay Ecosystem Restoration Feasibility Studies and played a key role in the $3 billion Santa Ana River Mainstem flood risk management project. Her work included strategic communications, public engagement, and facilitating numerous planning and safety exercises.

    A licensed landscape architect in California, Ms. Takata also has experience in private practice and public sector roles, including serving as a Watershed Planner for the County of Orange. She holds a Bachelor’s and Master’s degree in landscape architecture and resides in a historic farmhouse in southern California with her family, where she enjoys speed puzzling, arts and crafts, and is actively involved in her church community.

    Megan Terry, ASLA, PLA, SITES-AP

    Landscape Architect/Project Manager

    Water & Environmental Technologies

    Megan is a licensed Landscape Architect and SITES Accredited Professional in Montana. Much of her philosophy is rooted in a childhood spent in the forests of Montana in a multi-generational logging family, and then as a wildland firefighter throughout the Western US. This background influences her work and understanding of high mountain deserts, the impacts of climate on the land, and the influence of humans in nature. 

    Megan’s focus is on resilient, long-term solutions that address regional and local challenges, as well as considerations for the people and animals that call these places home. Megan has experiences that ranges from large remediation and reclamation projects like the Silver Bow Creek Conservation Area to planning documents like Climate Action Plans that are based in implementable actions.

    Megan holds a Bachelor’s Degree from the University of Idaho and studied abroad in Italy and Germany. She currently serves on the Executive Committee as the Montana Vice President for the Idaho-Montana chapter of ASLA and volunteers on several community boards including the municipal ADA committee and the Center for Performing Arts. As a foster parent and reunification proponent, Megan believes that landscape architects hold a unique position to advocate for those whose voices are often not heard, and to convey the impacts of the built environment on social connection and belonging within our communities.